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THE TIMES THEY ARE A CHANGIN'
Dr. Dan Rotach
When Bob Dylan sang “the times they are a-changin’”, he wasn’t
kidding. Recently I glanced over at my seventeen-year-old son doing
his homework. While he was online doing research for a paper, he was
also instant messaging four of his friends-all of this while
listening to his iPod
and typing words into his research paper. He explained to me that
he’s able to work better when he has a lot of stuff going on. It
helps his concentration. What a contrast from the time I got
irritated at the librarian at the
University
of Northern Iowa for whispering too loudly while I worked on a
research paper. The times they are a-changin’.
I’m a credentialed mediator, and for almost fifteen years it’s
been my privilege to come alongside dozens of churches and help them
manage their conflicts. Christian men and women have fought over
lots of different matters. They fight, I believe, because they are
not taking the time to understand each other.
A couple of years ago, while speaking at a church in
Illinois, a woman came up to me after the service crying, and she
was crying a lot! I had just enough ego to think that she was really
touched by my sermon. She was actually crying because of the way the
young people came dressed to church: wearing shorts. “This
generation has no respect for the Lord!” she proclaimed.
Attempting to challenge her perspective, I explained that it’s
not the outside, but the inside that counts.
Unfortunately she walked away from our conversation remarking
that “she will never understand today’s generation.”
Actually, her last observation was correct. She won’t understand
today’s generation until she is intentional about it. Neither will
today’s generation understand her until they get inside her world
for awhile.
It’s my privilege to teach a class called “Preaching to
Post-Moderns” at Bethel Seminary in
St.
Paul. I often tell my students: “The way people change is changing.”
The effective communicator to the generations must understand the
experiential backdrop of each generation. The way my 21-year-old
daughter processes life and forges decisions are fundamentally
different than my ways. She gives me a strange look when I explain
to her that I watched the Beatles make their television debut on the
Ed Sullivan Show. When I argued with my daughter about the quality
of love songs in my generation, in contrast to hers, she reminded me
that it was my generation that turned out such classic love song
lyrics as:
“Hello, I love you, won’t you tell me your name?”
“If you can’t be with the one you love, honey, love the one
you’re with.” Or the incredibly profound:
“Love means you never have to say you’re sorry.”
Watergate,
Vietnam, and Kent State did something to my generation, and we
developed a different set of values than the generation before. The
generation before me, often called the Builders, also leaned a set
of values from their circumstances. They experienced the Great
Depression and can remember what it was like to wonder about the
next meal. This explains why a builder I talked with recently became
noticeably upset when I explained that during an interview Lance
Bass, a singer for the group ‘NSync, threw away a half-eaten piece
of French toast. Someone picked up the piece of French toast and
sold it on eBay for $1025. The times they are a-changin’.
The generation following mine, sometimes called the Busters is
the MTV generation. They are choosing churches that allow a measure
of entertainment value, and that value drives the previous
generations nuts.
Whatever descriptive one uses to categorize today’s
generation-next Gen, GenNext, Generation X, Post-Moderns-this
generation is marked by two main characteristics:
Experience. Many of us reading this article were a part of the
information age. Give us information and data and we’re good to go.
Information isn't enough for today’s generation. They want
experience, which is why worship must incorporate images and
activity. A failure to understand this about this generation brings
an enormous amount of conflict, particularly in churches.
Connection. This generation is a group that must connect with one
another as demonstrated by my son instant messaging four other
people while working on a research paper. Connection with others is
a central focus to much of daily life.
Conflict emerges in churches when one generation is absolutely
convinced that their way of looking at life is the right way. How
can we pursue age reconciliation? To bridge some of the divides
between the generations, I find that Paul’s words are timely:
So accept each other, just as Christ as accepted you, then God
will be glorified (Romans 15:7)
So how does “accept each other” work to keep harmony and minimize
conflict in churches? In churches where I’ve intervened, and there
are obvious disconnects between generations, I’ve encouraged three
commitments:
The operative word here is "understand." I may not agree with
what you've concluded about life, but pure respect tells me that I
ought to listen and understand you, if your generation is different
than mine. Many times, we don't even do that. We use our generation
as the template of right or wrong and immediately refuse to listen
and understand.
I appreciate what one of the biblical authors said:
The purposes of a person's heart are deep waters. But a person of
understanding can draw them out (Proverbs 28:5)
Many times, this "drawing out" never happens because we are so
locked into thinking that our generation has the corner on the
truth, or the right way to look at life.
Recently, I intervened in a church that was fighting over worship
styles. As part of the intervention, I asked all of the young
people in the audience to come to the platform, and I allowed the
congregation to ask them questions about why they do life the way
they do. It was a way to get them to understand each other. One
young person was asked why he wears his pants so low. He responded:
“Because it’s comfortable.” The congregation laughed, but
this really was the first time that the generations had entered into
some measure of dialogue with each other.
As I’m typing this article, I’m spending some time with my
mother. She’s an 84-year-old widow and has experienced a very
difficult life. She explains to me in great detail what it was like
to raise children while her husband, my father, fought in World War
II. She explains what it was like to live with an hourly wage of 20
cents while Dad was off serving his country. I come away from those
discussions with a greater understanding of Mom’s values, and
sacrifices.
In churches that are experiencing conflicts between the
generations, I’ve encouraged public interviews during worship to
help gain a greater understanding of the values of each generation.
Recently, I advanced public dialogue between a member of the
Builder generation and a Post-modern person. I asked the Builder
three questions:
What do you wish this generation would
understand about yours?
What do you appreciate about this present
generation?
What do you pray about the most for your
children and grandchildren?
And that little interview went a long way in helping others
understand that there is simply a different set of values driving
that generation. Perhaps the calling for many of our churches in
conflict is the ancient wisdom to be quick to listen and slow to
speak (James
1:19). My core belief about conflict between the generations is that
we are not drawing each other out by listening carefully.
In this generation, there is an incredible spiritual search, a
level of authenticity that’s remarkable. The desire to connect with
God is very real-it is simply expressed and pursued differently than
the generations before.
The calling remains:
So accept each other, just as Christ as accepted you, then God
will be glorified (Romans 15:7)
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